Trump does not want a 'poor person' in cabinet role
US president
defends his decision to appoint wealthy individuals to his cabinet as 'smart'
at a rally in Iowa.
According to economists, Trump's cabinet is worth over $5bn [Scott Morgan/Reuters] |
Donald
Trump has said he doesn't want "a poor person" running the
economy of the United
Statesand has defended his decision to appoint wealthy individuals to his
cabinet.
Speaking to his supporters in Iowa on Wednesday, Trump said:
"Somebody said why did you appoint a rich person to be in charge of the
economy? ... I said because that's the kind of thinking we want."
"I love all people, rich or poor, but in those
particular positions, I just don't want a poor person. Does that make
sense?"
Trump, a billionaire businessman from New York, lauded the
appointments of former Goldman Sachs president Gary Cohn as chief economic
adviser and billionaire investor Wilbur Ross as Commerce Secretary as
"smart" decisions.
He explained that Cohn and Ross "had to give up a lot
to take these jobs" and "went from massive pay days to peanuts."
Cohn served as president and COO of Goldman Sachs
during the 2008 financial crisis when financial risks taken by the investment
bank lost $1.2bn of its clients' money.
"Of course, we regret that we did not do many things
better," he told Congress in 2010.
In 2010, Goldman agreed to pay $550m to settle civil fraud
charges by the SEC of misleading buyers of mortgage-related securities.
Cohn is just one of a number of former Goldman executives
who have joined the Trump administration. White House adviser Steve Bannon
and treasury secretary Steven Mnuchin both worked for the financial
institution.
Meanwhile, Wilbur Ross, a former investment banker
at Rothschild & Co., helped Trump avoid bankruptcy in the early 1990s
and saved his Taj Mahal casino hotel from collapse.
Ross helped bondholders negotiate with Trump, where the
final deal reduced Trump's ownership stake in the Taj but left him in charge.
According to author Hilary Rosenberg, the bondholders were unhappy when Ross
presented the plan.
Trump's supporters have openly welcomed the fact that he is
a businessman and not a politician beholden to special interest groups. But the
wealth of Trump's cabinet picks has led to accusations that some may still have
business holdings that leave the door open for potential conflicts of interest.
Source: Al Jazeera News
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